New ways to think Resilience Pathways
Persistent gender and social inequities undermine agri-food systems’ potential to contribute to inclusive and sustainable development. Systems thinking recognizes the interconnectedness and complexity of agri-food systems, emphasizing the need to consider various interrelated components and their dy...
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| Formato: | Ponencia |
| Lenguaje: | Inglés |
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CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality
2023
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| Acceso en línea: | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135093 |
| _version_ | 1855523974891438080 |
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| author | Farnworth, Cathy Rozel Rietveld, Anne M. |
| author_browse | Farnworth, Cathy Rozel Rietveld, Anne M. |
| author_facet | Farnworth, Cathy Rozel Rietveld, Anne M. |
| author_sort | Farnworth, Cathy Rozel |
| collection | Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace) |
| description | Persistent gender and social inequities undermine agri-food systems’ potential to contribute to inclusive and sustainable development. Systems thinking recognizes the interconnectedness and complexity of agri-food systems, emphasizing the need to consider various interrelated components and their dynamic interactions and highlights the need for integrated and transformative strategies that target multiple levels of the agri-food systems, from local to global. This session discusses four conceptual approaches that address gender equality and social inclusion in agri-food system development through the lens of systems thinking. The four approaches have each been developed in the framework of a different CGIAR research initiative: 1) Developed by the Mitigate+ Initiative on Low-emission Food System Development, the conceptual basis of a Living Lab for People is detailed as an inclusive and diverse space for people to design, test and advance their socio-technical innovations and modes of governance within a facilitated organizational structure. The Agroecology Initiative offers a framework for analyzing behavior change in agri-food systems by integrating behavioral concepts into the socialecological systems framework. Critical is the concept of opportunity space. 3) From the HER+ initiative on Gender Equality, theoretical work on how women within agri-food systems can move towards improved resilience in a climate change world is highlighted. Five elements—gender norms, intersectionality, power and agency, personality and lifecycle—help to understand how women achieve resilience. 4) Building on participatory and feminist-ecological approaches, the Aquatic Food Initiative sets out five impact pathways to address gender and social equity in aquatic food systems. |
| format | Ponencia |
| id | CGSpace135093 |
| institution | CGIAR Consortium |
| language | Inglés |
| publishDate | 2023 |
| publishDateRange | 2023 |
| publishDateSort | 2023 |
| publisher | CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality |
| publisherStr | CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality |
| record_format | dspace |
| spelling | CGSpace1350932024-09-09T10:04:48Z New ways to think Resilience Pathways Farnworth, Cathy Rozel Rietveld, Anne M. resilience gender Persistent gender and social inequities undermine agri-food systems’ potential to contribute to inclusive and sustainable development. Systems thinking recognizes the interconnectedness and complexity of agri-food systems, emphasizing the need to consider various interrelated components and their dynamic interactions and highlights the need for integrated and transformative strategies that target multiple levels of the agri-food systems, from local to global. This session discusses four conceptual approaches that address gender equality and social inclusion in agri-food system development through the lens of systems thinking. The four approaches have each been developed in the framework of a different CGIAR research initiative: 1) Developed by the Mitigate+ Initiative on Low-emission Food System Development, the conceptual basis of a Living Lab for People is detailed as an inclusive and diverse space for people to design, test and advance their socio-technical innovations and modes of governance within a facilitated organizational structure. The Agroecology Initiative offers a framework for analyzing behavior change in agri-food systems by integrating behavioral concepts into the socialecological systems framework. Critical is the concept of opportunity space. 3) From the HER+ initiative on Gender Equality, theoretical work on how women within agri-food systems can move towards improved resilience in a climate change world is highlighted. Five elements—gender norms, intersectionality, power and agency, personality and lifecycle—help to understand how women achieve resilience. 4) Building on participatory and feminist-ecological approaches, the Aquatic Food Initiative sets out five impact pathways to address gender and social equity in aquatic food systems. 2023-10-11 2023-12-07T05:55:44Z 2023-12-07T05:55:44Z Presentation https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135093 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR Initiative on Gender Equality Farnworth, C.R. and Rietveld, A. 2023. New ways to think Resilience Pathways. Presented at the CGIAR GENDER Conference 'From Research to Impact: Towards just and resilient agri-food systems', New Delhi, India, 9-12 October 2023. Nairobi, Kenya: CGIAR Gender Equality Initiative. |
| spellingShingle | resilience gender Farnworth, Cathy Rozel Rietveld, Anne M. New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title | New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title_full | New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title_fullStr | New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title_full_unstemmed | New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title_short | New ways to think Resilience Pathways |
| title_sort | new ways to think resilience pathways |
| topic | resilience gender |
| url | https://hdl.handle.net/10568/135093 |
| work_keys_str_mv | AT farnworthcathyrozel newwaystothinkresiliencepathways AT rietveldannem newwaystothinkresiliencepathways |